If steam was a horrid piece of shit, would so many people be using it or would so many AAA titles be distributed on steam?
Yes. Yes, they would and yes, there would be.
And I don't see anybody bringing up reasons people would choose Greenlight over Kickstarter I requested two posts ago.
And I don't see you responding to my asking you what exactly is so wrong with steam in the first place?
The reason noone answered your question of why Greenlight over Kickstarter is because they're two completely different things and it's kind of a non-question. But I'll answer you anyway, because I'm nice like that.
Kickstarter and Greenlight are two completely different services. Why do people choose to call the ambulance instead of the police? Kickstarter is a crowdfunding source. You post your idea, any work you have so far, and ask for funding to complete it. If you don't get the full figure you dont get any of it. After you've got the funding, and made the game, you still need to sell it. Steam is a distribution service (probobly the biggest digital distribution service for PC games infact). As a result, getting a game on steam will almost assuredly mean a huge increase in sales simply because so many people use steam. It's a captive audience for your game.
There's a series of posts by the developers of S.P.A.Z. where they talk about the process of developing their game. Quite a bit of it is focused on them trying to secure distribution deals with Steam, Gamersgate and another one I cant remember (I can't be bothered to search it out to link it, google if you're interested). They basically say that while getting on other digital distro services is a huge deal and well worth the effort, getting on steam is basically a make or break sort of affair. It's such a huge boon to the developer that it can literally make or break their games success.
Obviously a game that's allready been kickstarted will have an audience built-in... But I imagine most of them allready bought the game, or at least donated to it... I've not seen any kickstarter figures, but it would make sense. So with that scenario you're making a game which will pay for itself, but you still need to sell the game after it's done. That's why it's not a case of kickstarter or Greenlight. For a lot of developers it'll be Kickstarter
AND Greenlight. And of course quite a lot of developers wont be able to get kickstarted, or wont need to be.
So can you answer my questions with regards to why steam is so bad now please?